Cosmology and the arrow of time: Sean Carroll at TEDxCaltech

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
  • Sean Carroll is a theoretical physicist at Caltech. He received his Ph.D. in 1993 from Harvard University, and has previously worked at MIT, the Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Chicago. His research ranges over a number of topics in theoretical physics, focusing on cosmology, particle physics, and general relativity, with special emphasis on dark matter, dark energy, and the origin of the universe. He is the author of "From Eternity to Here," a popular book on cosmology and the arrow of time, and of "Spacetime and Geometry," a textbook on general relativity; has produced a set of introductory lectures for The Teaching Company entitled "Dark Matter and Dark Energy: The Dark Side of the Universe;" and is a co-founder of the popular science blog Cosmic Variance, blogs.discovermagazine.com/cos....
    About TEDx, x = independently organized event: In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized. (Subject to certain rules and regulations.)
    On January 14, 2011, Caltech hosted TEDxCaltech, an exciting one-day event to honor Richard Feynman, Nobel Laureate, Caltech physics professor, iconoclast, visionary, and all-around "curious character." Visit TEDxCaltech.com for more details.
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Komentáře • 730

  • @jacderida
    @jacderida Před 13 lety +11

    i just came across this today, and coincidentally, also just finished reading sean's book on the bus this morning! this is basically a summary of it in 15 minutes. he's an amazingly clear, articulate and concise speaker! i could listen to him talk about this stuff for hours on end. if you want a lot more detail, i'd highly recommend 'from eternity to here'.

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps Před 3 lety +4

    Drs. Sean Carroll and Brian Greene do an exceptional job of bringing physics and cosmology to the public commons. Thank you both.

  • @L0j1k
    @L0j1k Před 5 lety +29

    Wow this dude is amazing. I mean of course, I suppose. I rarely ever regret not having good professors, because learning is a personal thing, and I am self-taught in my career and all of my hobbies and interests. But this dude makes me wish I had someone like him. Kids are so lucky today, with CZcams and Coursera, and all that. Jeez.

  • @ddorman365
    @ddorman365 Před 7 lety +6

    Thank you TED Talks, Thank you Ms., Mr. Carroll for being my colleagues and testing my ideas on our existence, I cant wait to work with all of you, peace and love, Doug.

  • @AresPeer
    @AresPeer Před 10 lety +18

    I love these TED Talks, thanks for posting it online.

  • @saturn724
    @saturn724 Před 10 lety +115

    His lectures are excellent, I wish he was my professor

  • @Intraphase1
    @Intraphase1 Před 10 lety +3

    I understood your analogy as minimum variations vs maximum variations. Easy enough to grasp that way.

  • @catherineobrien4786
    @catherineobrien4786 Před 3 lety +4

    Totally enthralling and down to earth explanation in laymans terms with some humour. I enjoyed this presentation and will watch it again. A good wish likely granted. Thank you.

  • @Loulinful
    @Loulinful Před 4 lety

    I love that you left us with a big open question for us to ponder and discern. Thank you!

  • @eise101
    @eise101 Před rokem

    Impressed by how easy Sean Carroll talks about these subjects. Thank you!

  • @samwise2588
    @samwise2588 Před 11 lety +3

    This is still what I consider to be the best Ted talk ever released. It's grounded in science (not this soft-science shit they've been spamming my feed with lately :[ ), it addresses the current problems within it's field, it's highly factual, and it's content at large is very thought provoking. Cheers, Misour Carroll.

  • @TechNed
    @TechNed Před 6 lety +1

    Prof. Carroll's talks are always engaging.

  • @mach1gtx150
    @mach1gtx150 Před 4 lety +16

    Wow, he hardly took a breath to cover inception to extinction. Amazing lecture!

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    Very good info!!! This is an invitation to see a theory on 'time' with an emergent uncertain future that gives us a new understanding of quantum mechanics.

  • @sageejumanjee
    @sageejumanjee Před 5 lety +2

    this is the ultimate conversation

  • @Jedi_Are_Scum
    @Jedi_Are_Scum Před rokem +1

    Sean Carroll is excellent. He got one thing wrong near the end. He exclaims he agrees the universe is expanding forever. Then at 12:54, he talks about how all of the cosmos will die out as if fact. That is quite a statement to propose. If the universe is expanding for eternity as he claims, new stars can be forming, new space/dimensional pockets, etc. Infinite expansion of nothing? Even if true, for infinity/casualty that should at the very least cause something to happen, given a timeframe of infinity. It will never be an infinity of nothing, we will still always have cold debris such as rock, ice, and old technology for infinity, and if something is truly infinity, then by smashing together something is bound to happen. So rest assured most scientists don't think that far, when we found we are expanding indefinitely it meant a chance for life to survive. Even advanced civilizations prepare for it in several ways, creating wormholes to other universes, if you want to get really deep.

  • @soumenb22
    @soumenb22 Před 4 lety

    I have gone through his lecture in TTC videos , excellent 👍👍

  • @nadiraslam743
    @nadiraslam743 Před 8 lety +95

    It's annoying that these are so short.

    • @richarddobos264
      @richarddobos264 Před 4 lety +5

      You want him to be taller?

    • @neiltroppmann7773
      @neiltroppmann7773 Před 4 lety +1

      If you want to see Sean talk more look up Joe Rogan podcast, he has several podcasts with Sean that are great and are several hours long.

  • @jjzebell2
    @jjzebell2 Před 4 lety +2

    Sean has a great way of taking an immense exhausting subject and making it immense and exhausting.

    • @colingeorgejenkins2885
      @colingeorgejenkins2885 Před 4 lety

      John Zebell indeed why they just don't realise that e=mc2 is an ancient idea older than modern Newtonian physics. Probably because they don't want to admit they need to take CGJungs ideas into consideration

  • @ethanmaas
    @ethanmaas Před 12 lety +1

    Awesome video, great talk. Fun & informative.

  • @jonkomatsu8192
    @jonkomatsu8192 Před 6 lety +2

    The Cosmic Chicken! Of course!
    One of the best Ted Talks ever. Mahalo!

  • @clintwolf4495
    @clintwolf4495 Před 4 lety

    Great, very interesting talk. Thanks.

  • @AMDJ_
    @AMDJ_ Před 5 lety +9

    6:24 from _Time lapse in the future_

  • @peakimages
    @peakimages Před 12 lety

    Fascinating! Especially the part about the apple pie!

  • @buteverybodycallsmegiorgio
    @buteverybodycallsmegiorgio Před 11 lety +2

    Can someone explain Feynman's debunking of Boltzmann's hypothesis to me? I'm not really sure of what he means by that expectation of order...

  • @zakariakamal
    @zakariakamal Před 12 lety

    Question: Can any answer pl? In a positively curved Universe, acceleration of distant supernova would mean - beginning of contracting phase. Is it correct? If it is correct why it is not predicted in that way? I think there is no dark energy. In a positively curved universe galaxies should accelerate in contracting phase and would be seen receding even if they are approaching (for curved space).

  • @steviejd5803
    @steviejd5803 Před 3 lety

    I could listen to this guy for hours.

  • @PapaSmurf141
    @PapaSmurf141 Před 12 lety

    my brain! it can barely take it.the flow of knowledge into my head is glorious right now.

  • @primetime0104
    @primetime0104 Před 12 lety

    Thank you for your reply.

  • @CristianGarcia
    @CristianGarcia Před 11 lety +1

    I've always wondered where do forces play a role in this 'randomly moving particles' (statistical mechanics) view of the world. Although I cannot calculate anything, say A is the event of a galaxy forming, G is the existence of gravity, S is the distribution of matter through space in the early universe, the probability P( A | G & S ) is almost 1.
    Particles aren't just randomly moving, they exert forces on each other that increase the probability of forming structures.
    A

  • @ryanmedeiros9142
    @ryanmedeiros9142 Před 4 lety

    Great speech Sean. I've become more fascinated the past few yrs with the origins of the Universe & very quickly I recognized you were headed toward our supposed beginning in the immediate aftermath of the big bang in the "Egg of Life." Where we all truly were as 1 within a much smaller frame. I believe the egg "split" with the intro of gravity into the equation which drew out matter from the egg continually expanding the Universe since. Really interesting your thought that maybe the big bang isn't our origin. The more I learn the less I'm bound to our Earthly mindset but realize that our Universe seems to be a reflection of itself so we are able to like you said not only know our past but can ostensibly learn much of what's ahead or is it actually behind? My question comes back to why? Obviously there's intent behind existence so where did that originate? Was the big bang essentially a much higher intelligence than we cannot fully comprehend? I definitely don't see our origins from the big bang as a fluctuation something had to give us the matter that allows us to know what we've come to understand. I'm so looking forward to the rest of eternity & the twists & turns in our existence.

  • @jordensjunger
    @jordensjunger Před 9 lety +48

    No chicken. It's eggs all the way down. :)

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom Před 4 lety +4

      WHAT? Do you deny the undeniable truth that Adam and Eve rode on the back of a giant chicken in the garden of Eden? BLASPHEMER! HEATHEN!

    • @thehellyousay
      @thehellyousay Před 4 lety

      The turtles disagree.

    • @triky5384
      @triky5384 Před 4 lety

      I've always thought that was the answer

  • @ligayabarlow5077
    @ligayabarlow5077 Před 4 lety +2

    There is something intrinsically assinine and simplistic going on in here that is difficult to describe

    • @earlmcraw5606
      @earlmcraw5606 Před 4 lety

      We’re evolving and we’re going back in time

  • @SimonBartlett
    @SimonBartlett Před 13 lety

    great video. I understand entropy a little now.

  • @lastsonofabraham2678
    @lastsonofabraham2678 Před 4 lety +2

    Powerful , keep it up

  • @LuvHrtZ
    @LuvHrtZ Před 5 lety +5

    Time is affected by the density of space and/or matter, and, it seems reasonable to me that an object's 'observed' acceleration must reflect this. If we assume that 'new space' is not being created and that existing space is expanding, then the 'density' of that space would be more rarified toward 'the edge' of the universe and show non-linear results in the measured velocity of galaxies. Time would run faster the closer you look to the edge of the universe. This would require no dark matter or dark energy.
    I'm not refuting anything but merely offering up an idea.

  • @Daniel-yz3zf
    @Daniel-yz3zf Před 4 lety +4

    Watch at 0.75x speed for more time to absorb everything!!

    • @pavel9652
      @pavel9652 Před rokem

      Rewatch it now to test your knowledge retention ;)

  • @user-vg7zv5us5r
    @user-vg7zv5us5r Před rokem +1

    11:20 Pie in the sky joke becomes funnier with the Boltzmann's suggestion

  • @katzda
    @katzda Před 4 lety +29

    Universal chicken!!! Best explanation of God I've heard so far :-D

  • @beautifulcatastrophe
    @beautifulcatastrophe Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome talk

  • @econogate
    @econogate Před 8 lety +3

    Wouldn't cause of relativity the past and the present and the future all exist simultaneously, so there would then appear both a big bang and not one simultaneously, it just depends on where you maybe located and how fast you maybe traveling whether you maybe seeing a depiction of a big bang or not, correct? If you could travel so fast then maybe you could travel to a place where the big bang had not yet started and so forth, so time maybe an illusion like the movement of a big bang through space it maybe relative to the observer.

  • @ElTiti20091
    @ElTiti20091 Před 10 lety

    I wonder, ¿What relation is there between the arrow of time and the big inflation of the first instants of the Universe?

  • @TheRumpoKid
    @TheRumpoKid Před 13 lety +2

    Fascinating! :-)

  • @richarddobos264
    @richarddobos264 Před 4 lety

    Im wondering if this idea has a strong connection to mandelbrot fractals?

  • @mike0rr
    @mike0rr Před 8 lety +53

    Proud nerd moment when I was like, "I know this face, but from where.... Oh from Sixty Symbols!" haha.

  • @user-vg7zv5us5r
    @user-vg7zv5us5r Před rokem +1

    3:30 Boltzmann portrait looks like it came from the Fullmetal Alchemist screen-in-between.

  • @typhoon320i
    @typhoon320i Před 5 lety

    So he's saying that, as one of the many possible combinations of particle arrangements in space time, they once assessed into a single point, and have been moving apart ever since. That is our experience of our universe since the Big Bang. A low entropy turning to higher entropy period. So we experience the arrow of time. Sound correct?
    But I'm not sure how we hopped from that, to the multi-verse.

  • @Robert08010
    @Robert08010 Před 5 lety +8

    "Back when I was your age..." ??? He's never been my age. I think hes flipped his ever-lovin universal arrow of time.

    • @jenni1111100
      @jenni1111100 Před 4 lety +1

      His audience is college students.

    • @amwinters
      @amwinters Před 4 lety

      @@jenni1111100 you mean robots

  • @leemiller7155
    @leemiller7155 Před 5 lety

    Every Once and awhile I'll swear I'm listening to Alan Alda giving a lecture.

  • @daleeloph5038
    @daleeloph5038 Před 4 lety

    What is the universe expanding in to?

  • @IAmTheBlurr
    @IAmTheBlurr Před 13 lety

    I love Sean Carroll!

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    Could we have an Arrow of Time for each object? The organization is not formed at the beginning of the Universe with a big bang but is being formed here and now as a process of continuous spherical symmetry forming and breaking. The electron is the most spherical object in the Universe this forms the organization for statistical entropy or disorganization that we have in the second law of thermodynamics. By the way this is an invitation to see an artist theory of the physics of ‘time’

  • @walkerflocker7811
    @walkerflocker7811 Před 5 lety +2

    My favorite elements are candium and ballonium. The candy and balloon atoms respectively....

  • @BladeRunner-td8be
    @BladeRunner-td8be Před 4 lety +9

    This is the most mind boggling part of this lecture: "The amount of energy in the vacuum of space remains the same as the universe expands"

  • @naghamjamal2802
    @naghamjamal2802 Před 8 lety +7

    45 years to go!

  • @jonjohughes
    @jonjohughes Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent. no more no less!

  • @chrismc1967
    @chrismc1967 Před 5 lety

    That was fun!

  • @kerrylattimore2684
    @kerrylattimore2684 Před 4 lety

    I love Sean Carroll.

  • @daemonnice
    @daemonnice Před 11 lety +1

    Thunderbolts of the Gods utilizes archtype imagery from around the world that suggests that they were all influenced by witnessing the same events. It postulates that the planets were much closer together giving off plasma displays that can be reproduced in a lab.

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 Před 5 lety

      oh. that explains it. You are an electric universe weirdo lol.. go on with your bad self. there is no hope for you.

  • @harshjain93
    @harshjain93 Před 11 lety

    is there an underlying function,we can't see, that dictates what outcome will actually occur out of the many possibilities??? coz even if we make a computer program, that is programmed to accept one possibility out of the many, it has to rely on an underlying function. it can't generate randomness on it's own....

  • @xkguy
    @xkguy Před 5 lety

    Please explain how you can have energy...without 'stuff'. How do you know there is 'energy' if you cannot measure a temp or observe motion.?

    • @juxtapode2781
      @juxtapode2781 Před 5 lety

      because the interactions of things observed in the universe couldn't happen if the only thing there was is visible matter and measurable energy. Like gravity is not expected to work if it's only originated from the mass we can observe in the universe, it would be too weak. by calculating the difference between the mass needed for gravity to work as it does and what we currently observe you can estimate the mass of dark matter in the universe. Sixty symbols and other science channels have some good videos explaining that better than i would.

  • @daemonnice
    @daemonnice Před 11 lety

    this confirms what I believe, and that is that the big bang was a regional event in an infinite universe caused by the collision of two universes within a multiverse. Such collisions would cause the release of energy that could cool and form stars and planets.
    As for dark energy being the matrix of energy that is the universe, thats bang on. All things are energy, or another way to put it, all things are spirit and what we, the observer sees as physical is due to a limitation of perception.

  • @Sky2042
    @Sky2042 Před 12 lety

    @nifedonkey3 Bold, unfounded conjecture. What have you to support it?

  • @jameschoi2296
    @jameschoi2296 Před 10 měsíci

    Theory: Objects in the universe that are further away are accelerating faster because of gravitational pull. The initial big bang explosion was so high in energy that it was strong enough to push objects away from the universe's gravitational core. As objects continue to get pushed outwards from the core, it accelerates faster thus causing less gravity to have an effect on the objects being forced away. With less gravitational force, there is more acceleration.

  • @tradetor
    @tradetor Před 12 lety

    What will happen if the entropy keep increasing?

  • @99.99
    @99.99 Před 5 lety +12

    It thinks for itself....It creates itself....
    Ladies and gentlemen, I give you...
    THE UNIVERSE!!!!!😍

  • @x0acake
    @x0acake Před 5 lety +1

    14:45 when you find out you have still have 1 egg left after thinking you ran out days ago

  • @keep_walking_on_grass
    @keep_walking_on_grass Před 4 lety +1

    the first 3 words of any sentence in such a Sean Carroll talk should be: "we assume that ..."

  • @phy29
    @phy29 Před 4 lety

    the past is also added some of the knowing things go in the sens inverse of time .....

  • @taehwang1991
    @taehwang1991 Před 6 lety

    thX!!

  • @venkatbabu1722
    @venkatbabu1722 Před 3 lety

    14 is one such. To create more entropy means random numbers will have to have additives rather than subtractive. There is no subtraction or division in physics.

  • @TheFRiNgEguitars
    @TheFRiNgEguitars Před 4 lety

    In the midst of this awesome lecture is a 1968 Fender Super Reverb

    • @Blulou911
      @Blulou911 Před 4 lety +1

      Looks like it belongs there

  • @cognihensionchannel-doctorSSS

    The answer to multiverse is that if Einstein is always coorect that particles become waves at superluminal velocity then beyond the expansion luminous horizon no matter exists hence entropy there decreases normally. His hypothesis predicts antilife IMO!

  • @Mirrorgirl492
    @Mirrorgirl492 Před 5 lety +4

    Did the Organizers also ask Sean to finish with his Jazz Combo?

  • @heyandy889
    @heyandy889 Před 10 lety +1

    I know this guy from Sixty Symbols. He is the man!

  • @johnhanson4777
    @johnhanson4777 Před 4 lety +8

    TIME flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana.

  • @cristianfcao
    @cristianfcao Před 13 lety

    @jknengr796 I really don't get your comment. Of course you need to learn a lot to better understand cosmology, so what? I'm just saying he used a misleading mental image. You don't agree?
    BTW I LOVE listening to Sean Caroll and I appreciate his effort to explain science to the laymen as you've said. I'm not sure his style is one of the best (he always speaks too fast and presupposes a high level of familiarity with many concepts) but I really like him and appreciate his work.

  • @jknengr796
    @jknengr796 Před 13 lety

    @cristianfcao That is why you need to learn. Take a lot of Mathematics (Calculus, Differential Equations, Partial Differential Equations, etc) , Physics (many components), Astronomy, etc. Then, after about 6-8 years of graduate school you have a solid grasp of this. Throw in a little post-doc work in there also.
    He does a good job of explaining things to laymen. I.e. Explaining things to someone with maybe a high school science background.

  • @neilhoward6795
    @neilhoward6795 Před 5 lety

    I have a problem in the phrase "looking back in time". My very simplistic view is that a "moment" at my location is the exact same "moment" at any point in the universe or beyond the universe. The fact that the very distant "moment" can take numerous light years to tell us that it (a particle, a group of particles a star) has just had its moment for me to observe that moment on earth I will need to live all most forever to witness the arrival of that moment at my location . The conclusion that I draw is that each and every particle has a "moment" in which every other particle has a mathematical fix in space. If you will, a "Universal General Positioning". What the human race is observing is "Change" in the absolute coordinates of all partilces in what ever form. Being that is the case, the need to have a "dimension of time" becomes redundant. After all, the measurement of time is one that we humans have invented and is a concept to allow us to organise when and where our bodies our things, our World can be coordinated. Given that, once Einstein got to Special Relativity he got stuck on General Relativity and then he really got hung up that Gravity is observed but cannot be explained. Einstein had a buddy, a mathematician, who he turned to with his problem. His problem was given that a particle with mass is travelling in a straight line through space how can a second particle travelling through space on a different trajectory be mathematically cleared to meet with each other. Thats when Herman Minkowski offered a solution which was to cause a depression, a vortix, in which a particle can be taken through a change of direction by following a straight line which has been curved. It is referred to as Minkowski Space Time. This clever solution has never been proven and has led science, in my humble opinion up a blind alley trying to bring together Special and General Relativity together as one.
    The concept of travelling back through time is therefore binned as to travel, "to return", to a original form would infer all the particles of the universe would have to conform in a mathematical relationship to each other coincidental to the form that is anticipated by travelling back in "time". Similarly, the concept of travelling forward through time would infer an arrival in the future would need all the total elements of the Universe to be in lock-step in accordance with the mathematical lock on their postions at that "time" chosen. If time is binned it will make the understanding of our universe that much easier as I feel confident the solution will turn out to be a very precise but simple one

  • @Ddub1083
    @Ddub1083 Před 11 lety

    after a bit more study i definitely wanna read up on it. I like any book with the format blank of the gods my new favorite being food of the gods which tells the theory that human brain size was caused by pre-modern humans eating halucinagenic mushrooms. but i mean its trying to explain phenomena which are already explained by gravity. Stars are formed by masses of hydrogen with enough gravitational force to start fusion. the resulting star is electric true but resulting from gravity and fusion

  • @colleenforrest7936
    @colleenforrest7936 Před 4 lety +1

    Maybe it's not a "push" but the resultant backflow of a "pull"

    • @lawofliberty3517
      @lawofliberty3517 Před 4 lety

      Seems plausible, especially if you consider the electrically charged plasma theory.

  • @pappapaps
    @pappapaps Před 4 lety +1

    But why must infinity create infinite fluctuations/events/systems and compositions?
    Let's say, instead of particles we have all the letters of the alphabet; Now with infinite time and letters, what is to say that all possible words and phrases must come about by default? That universe could consist of scarce amounts of low entropy systems and fluctuations, such that you may find half the words of shakespeare some where once, perhaps, but mainly it would be A's and O's for infinity.

  • @PrivateAckbar
    @PrivateAckbar Před 11 lety

    This made me search out Hoyle's paradox.

  • @sunsaverfromnhh9184
    @sunsaverfromnhh9184 Před 4 lety

    I like the idea of a multiverse- but i prefer to think of these as branching timelines for each computational point or virtual particle- not "parallel" realities as some suggest. You can't have time without space, and visa/versa, so there's no doubt in my mind that Sean's radical ideas will be vindicated. Yes, it's a set of alternative universes defined by tensor networks, or maybe a "co-existing" multiverse of alternative timelines for each, virtual particle. We have free will, and sometimes do things that statistics and AI supercomputers fail to accurately predict.

  • @bogulom
    @bogulom Před 5 lety +15

    Does it mean that there is an apple pie somewhere in the universe?

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 Před 5 lety

      probably more than one, and perhaps even an infinite number of variations of the same one, and each unique apple pie, having infinite itierations in infinite parallell universes in an infinite multiverse....

    • @ck58npj72
      @ck58npj72 Před 5 lety +1

      Feynman says nope

    • @RogerBarraud
      @RogerBarraud Před 4 lety

      Yep - which explains what the teapot is for as well...

    • @NOMAD-qp3dd
      @NOMAD-qp3dd Před 3 lety

      There's an apple pie in my freezer, want me to crack it out? Sounds gooood, heat it up, plop some vanilla on it, BLAM, you know you gotta let that vanilla melt a little.

    • @ElasticReality
      @ElasticReality Před 3 lety +1

      The Universe is overflowing with Apple Pie. It's an applepieverse. Get you some, brother.

  • @oldschoolfoil2365
    @oldschoolfoil2365 Před 5 lety +1

    jack parsons worked at caltech too they even named a crater after him

    • @ElasticReality
      @ElasticReality Před 3 lety

      Man, i'm trying to find some way I wouldn't take that the wrong way if it was me. "Hey Elastic, we named a pothole after you, come check it out"

  • @davebashford3753
    @davebashford3753 Před 3 lety

    What exactly is a "precisely similar calculation"? [8:08]

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Před rokem

      It is approximately the same math but exactly the same idea. Maybe.

  • @tubedude709
    @tubedude709 Před 11 lety

    Was there fields in "space" before the big bang?

  • @mjohnson8107
    @mjohnson8107 Před 4 lety

    It seems like the Universe once expanded to a point of thermal equilibrium is the same as the universe before the big band at thermal equilibrium. What about a Bose-Einstein condensate could it be state of matter at the point before the big bang at the end of that expansion?

  • @socksumi
    @socksumi Před 5 lety +2

    They don't know. So much speculation short of confirmation. Our knowledge of the universe is in it's infancy. So much to learn and so difficult to investigate. I'd love to be around a hundred years from now to see what our best cosmos are saying then.

  • @donaldsydney3257
    @donaldsydney3257 Před 5 lety +4

    The universe is a collection of minds. Consciousness came first.

  • @naturallynatural9151
    @naturallynatural9151 Před 4 lety

    I think his speech was the start of the big bang.

  • @kathleenjimenez8179
    @kathleenjimenez8179 Před 5 lety +1

    Expanding into what?

    • @arjunpadiyar956
      @arjunpadiyar956 Před 5 lety

      Space doesn't necessarily need to expand into something. Instead of imagining it expanding, imagine new space being created between objects. It's a bit easier to comprehend this way.

  • @jacobjamar
    @jacobjamar Před 8 lety

    Could dark energy be a force with less gravity? Like since we expanding the dark energy is becoming more and more observable cause less gravity is pulling on it.

  • @zoooooopopo
    @zoooooopopo Před 12 lety

    @fryingsok id like to see you do a similar speech as intriguing, entertaining and within the time limit whilst GETTING ALL PRECIOUS DETAILS JUST SO.

  • @janeymitchum4925
    @janeymitchum4925 Před 4 lety

    16:00 min. Instead of having energy; what if Space had negative energy?? That way it would need to acquire energy just to get up to zero or neutral? Just a thought...

    • @ElasticReality
      @ElasticReality Před 3 lety

      We can always roll it down a steep Nebula and try popping the clutch.

  • @calvinchen2903
    @calvinchen2903 Před 8 lety +2

    When he says that there is the same amount of energy per cubic centimetre (same density) even though the universe is expanding, doesn't that imply that energy is 'created'?

    • @slenda8205
      @slenda8205 Před 8 lety

      +Calvin Chen Technically dark energy is being created not energy per say but yeah I've been thinking the same thing

    • @Mikelovision
      @Mikelovision Před 8 lety

      +Calvin Chen Would energy be created if you were to pull a rubber band 3 meters from your thumb? That's a simplified model of the big bang theory. It implies that the energy has always been there and it's expanding faster than light.

    • @flamingspew
      @flamingspew Před 6 lety

      Space itself is also expanding... so a cubic cm is also getting larger

    • @crazieeez
      @crazieeez Před 6 lety

      Yes, energy is created. The observable universe gets heavier and have more energy. The UNIVERSE including the unobservable is and was always infinite in energy.

  • @X-Gen-001
    @X-Gen-001 Před 4 lety +2

    Just a thought or two.. Gravity is the sum of all possible timelines which we see as superposition states, ie the primary principle of quantum theory. All particles and wave perturbations are entangled with each other. The closest those wave perturbations are in their respective fields to each other in 3 spatial dimensions, the more entangled they become resulting in spacetime curvature around those more entangled regions. Could this be what gravity intrinsically is? ... Or have I had too many shots of Jack Daniels this evening?

    • @Anskurshaikh
      @Anskurshaikh Před 4 lety

      I think latter is the case.

    • @X-Gen-001
      @X-Gen-001 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Anskurshaikh Hmm yes I concur. Apparently I've been drunk theoretical physics-ing again.

    • @Anskurshaikh
      @Anskurshaikh Před 4 lety

      @@X-Gen-001 well do you have a Phd in Physics?

    • @X-Gen-001
      @X-Gen-001 Před 4 lety

      @@Anskurshaikh lol Not as yet mate. How about you?

  • @giarose240
    @giarose240 Před 4 lety +1

    Anyone else notice it's the same place as the big bang theory is set (Caltech university Pasadena California)

  • @JimCullen
    @JimCullen Před 12 lety

    @Sky2042 It turns out they both happened to randomly occur at the same time.